In “Style,” the young Vietnamese girl dancing in the ruins is described in detail. Approximately how old does O’Brien describe her as being?
She is around fourteen
In 'Church,' the platoon sets up a temporary camp inside an abandoned pagoda. What religion's place of worship is a pagoda?
Buddhism
What piece of jewelry was on the dead soldiers body?
A gold ring
The chapter 'Style' centers on a young Vietnamese girl doing this action alone among the ruins of her village, which none of the soldiers can explain.
Dancing
Two monks remain at the pagoda and help the soldiers. What do they clean for Henry Dobbins?
His machine gun
O'Brien repeatedly imagines an elaborate backstory for the dead soldier, what did he imagine the soldier wanted to become one day?
A math teacher
Azar mocks the girl by imitating her, while this soldier stops him and carries him to a well.
Henry Dobbins
What does Henry Dobbins share with Kiowa about what he wants to do after the war?
He says he wants to become a minister even though he doesn't really believe in God.
In the chapter, Kiowa repeatedly tries to pull O'Brien away from his guilt-stricken staring with this practical, blunt argument about the morality of the kill.
Kiowa tells him it was a good kill the man had a weapon and would have killed O'Brien, it was self-defense.
When the soldiers drag the girl’s dead family out an infant, an old woman, and another woman the girl keeps dancing and makes a specific gesture. What does she do, and what does O’Brien say about it?
She puts her palms against her ears, dances sideways, then backwards. O’Brien says it “must’ve meant something” leaving the meaning deliberately unexplained.
The two monks at the pagoda never show fear, resentment, or confusion toward the armed soldiers occupying their sacred space. Instead, they smile and do laundry. What does their behavior symbolize, and what does it make the soldiers feel?
The monks symbolize grace and spiritual peace. Their unquestioning service makes the soldiers feel oddly clean and cared for showing how morally burdened the soldiers feel inside themselves.
O’Brien describes the soldier’s chest as “sunken and poorly muscled — a scholar, maybe,” with the wrists of a child, and imagines he dreaded the war. What is the effect of pairing these physical details with the imagined biography?
It collapses the distance between O’Brien and his victim — a gentle, reluctant young man much like O’Brien himself. This mirroring deepens the guilt by suggesting he killed someone who shared his own fear of the war.
That night Azar mocks the girl’s dancing with jumps, spins, and an erotic movement. Dobbins stops him physically and say the chapter runs line “All right then dance right.” Why is this last line significant?
It’s significant because it demands respect for the dancing without needing to explain it
Kiowa describes how churches make him feel but then immediately says 'This is all wrong. I don't care what, it's still a church.' Dobbins simply replies 'True.' What does this contradiction within Kiowa's own words reveal about his character?
Kiowa is torn between genuinely loving the sacred feeling of churches and his moral conviction that the platoon is desecrating one by setting up camp inside it. He can articulate both the beauty and the wrongness at the same time, showing he is the most spiritually and morally self-aware soldier in the platoon
O’Brien never says “I killed him” or “I feel guilty” — he stares, imagines, and repeats. Kiowa tells him to move on but he stays frozen. What does his inability to speak or move reveal about language, trauma, and moral responsibility in the novel?
It enacts the book’s central problem — storytelling is O’Brien’s tool for processing experience, but here it fails him. He can only circle the body obsessively. The freeze suggests guilt, unlike grief, resists the redemption that narrative usually offers.